The design of the higher-energy cooler for Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) recently adopted a non-magnetized approach which requires a low temperature electron beam. However, to avoid significant loss of heavy ions due to recombination with electrons in the cooling section, the temperature of the electron beam should be high. These two contradictory requirements are satisfied in the design of the RWIC cooler with the help of the undulator fields. The model of the friction force in the presence of an undulator field was benchmarked vs. direct numerical simulations with an excellent agreement. Here, we discuss cooling dynamics simulations with a helical undulator, including recombination suppression and resulting luminosities
The Electron cooling beam has both coherent and incoherent effects to the circulating ion beam. The ...
Abstract Electron cooling was proposed to increase the luminosity of the Relativistic Heavy Ion Coll...
A concrete interest in running RHIC at low energies in a range of 2.5-25 GeV/nucleon total energy of...
The design of the higher-energy cooler for Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) recently adopted a...
The high-energy electron cooling system for RHIC-II is unique compared to standard coolers. It requi...
Recently, a strong interest emerged in running the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) at low bea...
The physics interest in a luminosity upgrade of RHIC requires the development of a cooling-frontier ...
Electron cooling at RHIC-I1 upgrade imposes strict requirements on the quality of the electron beam ...
An electron cooler, based on an Energy Recovery Linac (ERL) is under development for the Relativisti...
The Accelerator Collider Department (CAD) at Brookhaven National Laboratory is operating the Relativ...
The fundamental questions about QCD which can be directly answered at Relativistic Heavy Ion Collide...
The Department of Energy has plans, during the next two or three years, to design an electron coolin...
There is a strong interest in heavy-ion RHIC collisions in the energy range below the present RHIC i...
All electron cooling systems which were in operation so far employed electron beam generated with an...
Electron cooling was proposed to increase the luminosity of the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHI...
The Electron cooling beam has both coherent and incoherent effects to the circulating ion beam. The ...
Abstract Electron cooling was proposed to increase the luminosity of the Relativistic Heavy Ion Coll...
A concrete interest in running RHIC at low energies in a range of 2.5-25 GeV/nucleon total energy of...
The design of the higher-energy cooler for Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) recently adopted a...
The high-energy electron cooling system for RHIC-II is unique compared to standard coolers. It requi...
Recently, a strong interest emerged in running the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) at low bea...
The physics interest in a luminosity upgrade of RHIC requires the development of a cooling-frontier ...
Electron cooling at RHIC-I1 upgrade imposes strict requirements on the quality of the electron beam ...
An electron cooler, based on an Energy Recovery Linac (ERL) is under development for the Relativisti...
The Accelerator Collider Department (CAD) at Brookhaven National Laboratory is operating the Relativ...
The fundamental questions about QCD which can be directly answered at Relativistic Heavy Ion Collide...
The Department of Energy has plans, during the next two or three years, to design an electron coolin...
There is a strong interest in heavy-ion RHIC collisions in the energy range below the present RHIC i...
All electron cooling systems which were in operation so far employed electron beam generated with an...
Electron cooling was proposed to increase the luminosity of the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHI...
The Electron cooling beam has both coherent and incoherent effects to the circulating ion beam. The ...
Abstract Electron cooling was proposed to increase the luminosity of the Relativistic Heavy Ion Coll...
A concrete interest in running RHIC at low energies in a range of 2.5-25 GeV/nucleon total energy of...